âWhile I do this,â he says, âcrawl to the bow and untie the painter.â Everlyn looks confused. âThe line. The rope.â Landlubber , he thinks.
She nods and slips past him. She doesnât ask why he needs the rope and lets the mystery of it burnish the next five minutes of life adrift.
The knot is hard as steel, hammered by a thousand waves. She wonders if this is a test of patience. Her fingers are powerful from yanking roots and nimble from untangling vines, but the knot gives only the tiniest bit with each tug. She develops a rhythm after a while, which lets her look into the water.
The sea is lifeless compared to the lake at Ayden, whose shallows are covered in nests. She splashed and shrieked in summer, especially when a mother fish nipped at her for stepping on a nest, and she slid in winter until her friend went through the ice and drowned, then it wasnât so much fun. The lake was huge to her as a child. It could fit in the dinghy compared to the sea.
Everlyn gets the painter free. Having fixed his pantsâall sailors can sewâJeryon rewraps and pockets the needle, then trades her pins for the painter and cuts off a piece as long as his blade. This he slices longitudinally a third of the way through. He fits the straight edge into the rope and saws experimentally at the starboard gunwale forward of the oarlock. The rope guards his finger satisfactorily. He keeps sawing.
âFirst, weâre going to remove the gunwales section by section,â Jeryon says.
The poth says, âWonât that make the boat fall apart?â
âWere this a new dinghy, maybe,â he says. âNowadays, every bit of wood is minimized to keep costs down. Boats donât last more than a couple years. Some galleys donât even carry them anymore. But this dinghy is pre-League and overdesigned. Itâll last.â He taps the gunwale with his blade. âTwo boards. Weâll just take the top one.â He shakes his head. âI even got her cheap, for being ancient.â
He cuts through the top board, pushes past the poth, and saws the end by the breasthook.
âIf it eases your mind,â he said, âthe boat only has to stay afloat for three days. Weâll be dead of thirst after that. Actually weâll probably be too weak for work after two.â
âOnce a child got lost in the woods around Ayden,â she says. âHe lasted six days without water before he was found.â
âHe wasnât in this sun. But you could be right. Maybe we could go a week. Letâs plan for three days, though.â
He cuts through the board and wedges it up with the blade. âTake the pin,â he says, âand slide it underneath the gunwale so it doesnât sit back down.â She does so. âDonât lever it. Youâll bend the pin. Just slide it aft as I do the levering.â
They work it free slowly and steadily until Jeryon can get his fingers under it and yank it up nails and all. His rope handle has been nearly worn through, so he makes an inch-long slice up one end of the piece of gunwale, cuts off the end to make two opposing pieces, makes a quarter-inch cut in their opposing faces, and clasps the pieces together tight around half the blade to create a handle. He folds the rest of his rope to make a new fingerguard. âNow, letâs take up the rest.â
It doesnât take her much longer to realize that he doesnât really need her to help. âYouâre just giving me something to do,â she says, âso I donât panic.â
âYes,â he says.
âI donât panic,â she says.
He gives her a long look and says, âReduce the painter to its strands. Iâll need those soon.â
After a while she says, âWe could be found by another galley.â
âWe wonât be,â he says. âGalleys donât often cross Tallan. They row north in the gutter between the
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